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What are airline companies doing in response to Cathay Pacific's Plane A350 engine failure

Numerous airline companies are carrying out precautionary inspections on their Airplane A350 fleets after Hong Kong's Cathay Pacific found 15 aircrafts that required fuel line repair work following the inflight failure of an engine part on Monday.

The issue happened on a five-year-old Airplane A350-1000, which uses Rolls-Royce's Trent XWB-97 engines, but providers are likewise inspecting the more popular A350-900 airplane which use a different engine design.

Here is what airline companies are doing, divided by the design of the aircraft:

A350-1000

Cathay Pacific identified 15 airplane that required replacement of engine elements and six have currently been fixed, while the remaining 9 will be fixed by Saturday. It did not specify which designs were being repaired.

Japan Airlines (JAL), which has 5 brand-new A350-1000s, stated it had actually carried out three engine evaluations by Tuesday and discovered them to be safe. The two remaining airplanes were to be examined Wednesday.

Qatar Airways said the concern had no impact on its 24 A350-1000 airplane and it would continue to monitor any advancements.

British Airways, which has 18 A350-1000s, and Virgin Atlantic, which operates 12, were not immediately offered for remark.

A350-900

A representative for JAL said the Tokyo-based provider was also checking its A350-900 airplane as a preventative measure and no issues had actually been discovered up until now.

Air China, a significant A350-900 operator, will carry out basic engine checks, reported Caixin, a Chinese business and economics publication.

Singapore Airlines, which has a fleet of 63 A350-900 aircrafts, stated it was checking the engines on its aircraft but there was no influence on flights.

Taiwan's Starlux, which operates six A350-900, stated it had actually contacted Rolls-Royce out of care and was awaiting an official reply.

Air France and Lufthansa Group, which also have A350-900s, told Reuters they were in touch with Rolls-Royce and Jet and were keeping an eye on the circumstance closely.

Delta Air Lines, which has 28 A350-900s, and Thai Airways, which has 23 of them, were not right away readily available for remark.

(source: Reuters)